baclofen.info - home baclofen.info - FAQ baclofen.info - contact information
patient information
baclofen.info - ITB Location
baclofen.info - articles
baclofen.info - ITB Kids Group
baclofen.info - downloads
baclofen.info - video footage
 

Patient Information

Cerebral Palsy

Multiple Sclerosis

Spinal Cord Injury

Stroke

 

Traumatic Brain Injury

Chapters

What is Traumatic Brain Injury?

Types of Traumatic Brain Injury?

Consequences of Traumatic Brain Injury

Rehabilition

What is Baclofen?

What is ITB Therapy?

The Test-Dose

The Surgical Procedure

The Follow-Up Procedure
including Refill

The Synchromed II Pump

What is Baclofen?

Historically baclofen was originally developed in the 1920's to treat epilepsy and was a derivative of diazepam. Its clinical effect on epilepsy was found to be disappointing but it was found to be beneficial on lessening spasticity. Baclofen is called an agonist (mimic) of a natural neurotransmitter found in the body called GABA - an acronym for gamma-aminobutyric acid.

Baclofen is used to reduce muscle tone and needs to bind to receptors located on the spinal cord to exert its clinical effect. The spinal cord is a reflex system, a feedback loop. The most obvious example of a reflex is the withdrawal to heat when you burn yourself. This movement is brisk and not very well controlled. This is similar to what happens in CP. Without adequate control from the brain, every movement is like a reflex, being rough and uncontrolled. The reflex can spread through the body causing spasms or “arching”.

Baclofen works on this reflex circuit by inhibiting it (slowing it down).

The first line pharmacological treatment is to administer baclofen orally in tablet form. Baclofen is rapidly absorbed after oral administration, and it is partially metabolised (broken down) by the liver but largely excreted by the kidneys unchanged.

In the majority of children oral baclofen or other oral medications provide adequate management of spasticity. But in a few children the dosages needed are extremely high resulting in unwanted side-effects such as nausea, vomiting, sedation, drowsiness, confusion, memory and attention problems. It is in these children that a decision can be made to deliver a liquid formulation of baclofen, called “intrathecal baclofen” directly into the intrathecal space, a fluid filled cavity surrounding the spinal cord, via an implantable programmable pump. Since the ITB is delivered precisely to where the receptors are located the dose of ITB necessary to slow down the reflex circuit is generally 100 times smaller than the equivalent oral dose whilst still giving a positive clinical effect and minimal, if any, side-effects.